Creating Safe Spaces for GLBTQ+ Youth
Leah Langby
May 20, 2015
Keeping Up With Kids

I attended a training session today sponsored by the AIDS Resource Center entitled Creating Safe Spaces for GLBTQ+ Youth in the Chippewa Valley.  GLBTQ stands for Gay, Lesbian, Bi, Transgender and Questioning/Queer.  The room was full of people from around the area, including several librarians (yay, librarians!).  It was a useful training, and I would have happily stayed for longer than the two hours allotted.

I think it is our responsibility as librarians who work with teens to try to get up to speed on what issues GLBTQ youth are facing and how we can create safer spaces for them in our libraries.  Health disparities for GLB youth in Wisconsin are stark, according to the WI Department of Health Services.  They are 5 times more likely to attempt suicide or get injured in a fight.  Four times greater odds of having sex before the age of 13.  Three times more likely to skip school because they feel unsafe.  And half as likely to feel they belong in school.  Source.

The trainers shared some tips for people who work with GLBTQ youth (and if you work with youth, you work with GLBTQ youth).  Take a look here and here.  And June is ALA’s GLBT Book Month (Thanks to my colleague Pam Gardow for sharing that information).

search all blog posts using keywords or title, date, categories

Archives

Categories

Related Articles

Thanksgiving Books

I recently got a question from a librarian who had weeded a lot of Thanksgiving books that perpetuate myths about Thanksgiving that are both historically inaccurate and promote harmful ideas about the Indigenous people already here when the colonists celebrated their...

Marketing to Teens

Thanks to Reb for passing along this sound advice from Angela Hursch about marketing to what can be a very tricky audience:  teens.  Take a look at this short video, Boost Teen Library Attendance,  and see how many of these things you are already doing, and if there...

Art to Calm Squirming Bodies and Minds

I attended an excellent webinar yesterday through Early Childhood Education Webinars with Anna Reyner, an art therapist who is also an early childhood expert.  Wow!  So many wonderful ideas.  The Early Childhood Education Webinars are almost always thought-provoking,...